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First civilians return to Raqqa after mines cleared — US-backed force

By AFP - Nov 06,2017 - Last updated at Nov 06,2017

Members of the Al Fakhry family — Syrian refugees from the city of Raqqa — the daugther Reham (left), the son Haitham (centre bottom) and their parents Assad (central top) and Shiar, pose in Quissac on October 30 (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Hundreds of civilians have returned to a battered district of Syria’s Raqqa in what a US-backed force said was the first wave of returns since it cleared explosives left by extremists.

The Daesh terror group lost control of Raqqa — once its primary Syrian bastion — on October 17 after a months-long battle with the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).

Tens of thousands of people fled the city during the offensive, reducing Raqqa to a ghost town of collapsed buildings.

The SDF said in an online statement on Sunday that hundreds of families had returned to Al Meshleb, Raqqa’s easternmost district. 

“The SDF informed civilians from Al Meshleb that they could return to their homes after mine-removal teams had finished clearing the entire neighbourhood of explosives left indiscriminately in civilian homes by Daesh,” the force’s press centre said. 

It said the district was the first to which residents had returned since the city’s “liberation from Daesh.”

After capturing Raqqa, the SDF sealed off the city to allow for mine removal operations in bombed-out neighbourhoods. 

Residents often amassed at checkpoints in recent weeks, waiting for permission to access the city and see if their homes were still standing. 

Some civilians who sneaked in were killed by unexploded ordnance.

Mine-clearing and reconstruction operations in Raqqa are being coordinated by the Raqqa Civil Council, a provisional local government body appointed by the SDF but based outside the city.

“Yes, residents of Al Meshleb returned to their homes — but the whole city hasn’t been cleared of mines yet,” senior council member Omar Alloush told AFP on Monday. 

The deputy head of the council’s reconstruction committee, Nazmi Mohammad, said the body had dispatched 10 bulldozers to Raqqa to help clear rubble and blocked-off roads in Al Meshleb. 

After capturing Raqqa in 2014, Daesh used the city as a hub for the administration of its self-styled “caliphate” in Iraq and Syria. 

Following months of losses in the face of multiple offensives, touted Daesh fighters are now defending their last redoubts further down the Euphrates Valley. 

 

More than 330,000 people have been killed since Syria’s conflict erupted in March 2011 with anti-government protests that were brutally suppressed.

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